Fortunately for innocent Iraqis, and unfortunately for Tony
Blair and his masters, British forces were caught
red-handed in a failed
false flag operation. Had their scheme gone according to
plan, with some random Muslim bystander dragged off the street,
shot or beaten senseless, and pushed into the car a minute before
it was remotely detonated, the "suicide bomber terrorist
attack" would no doubt be said to have "all the
hallmarks of al Qaeda". Dozens would have been sacrificed to
provide the pretext for UK forces to remain in Iraq.

Blair's controllers ordered him to make sure UK troops did not
leave Iraq, or else. How it was done, was down to Blair and the
special forces on the ground. Now, as speculation mounts that the
Government is considering an exit strategy, there is the risk of
a major "al Qaeda" attack in Iraq that would
"prove" that the Iraqis could not be left to manage
their own security.

A central plank of the government case for continuing the
occupation is that "the Iraqis want us there". Yes, a
few figureheads in a puppet government - installed months after
we illegally invaded their country and deposed the lawful
government - say what they have been paid to say. The best
indication of what the Iraqi people want can be seen in their
interactions with Warrior armoured vehicles, and their treatment
of the flaming soldiers forced to leap for their lives.

This new development does show that Israel/Mossad no longer
has a monopoly on false flag black ops. In 9/11, the Bush
administration's role was limited to the remote piloting of an
unmanned plane or missile into a renovated section of the
Pentagon (and with their own complicity forcing them to cover up
Israel's role in demolishing the WTC in a $3.6 billion insurance
scam). Although it is still unlikely that a government would
stage a massive phony "al Qaeda" terrorist attack in
its own country, the increasing Israelization of the UK, US, etc
means that special forces of these countries will become
increasingly involved in black ops abroad. After all, they regard
the natives as little more than animals.